West Wilts Group

Red Lodge Plantation: Friday, 24th February 2017

I have been having a bit of an issue at Red Lodge recently. Because the main track has been severely damaged by the machinery used for the thinning operations over the last year-and-a-half, I can no longer get my car the kilometre into the wood where my feeding station is set. It is a long trek to get all the equipment and the ringing station in place for a session, so a few weeks ago I moved the feeding station to a position just a couple of hundred metres away from where we park the cars. The feeding station had been in place for 5 years with no problems of theft or vandalism. The new position has clearly upset somebody: 3 days after the bird table was dug into its new position I found it had been uprooted and put to one side. Thinking it might have just been blown over in this interminable bad weather, I dug it back in a few metres back from where it was before. The next week, when I went to top up the feeders, no bird table. I eventually located it in the middle of a nearby pond. On the basis that I don't give in to bullies, I dug it back in, with the pole considerably deeper into the subsoil.

Anyway, I was planning a session for this morning and went to top up the feeders yesterday and, presumably because you have to be pretty daft to go walking in the woods when it is blowing up to 60mph (trees are down in the wood), the table was still in place. So, this morning I set my nets and, as I was finishing setting the last net, adjacent to the bird table, a 50-something male, clad in something that looked remarkably like a dry suit, came haring through the woods on his mountain bike, on a collision course for my nets and the table. I stopped him, pointed out where my nets were and the work that goes on and why I supplementary feed in the wood. I raised the problems of mindless petty vandalism on Forestry Commission sites. I dropped into the conversation that the FC have said they will put up covert camera coverage and alert the police if it happens again. He protested mightily that he would never have done anything like that. Funnily enough, I got the feeling that the problem might have been resolved.

As this was a solo session, I only set two 18m and one 9m nets. It still ended up being a lot of work, with large numbers of Blue, Great and Coal Tits turning up. Anybody who has been ringing for any length of time will know of the "fun" of extracting large numbers of Blue Tits, particularly when on your own, and when a sizeable proportion decide to double pocket or spin, or combine them together. Having moaned a bit, it was actually an excellent session. The highlight had to be the first Siskin caught in the wood since I started ringing there in autumn 2012. This follows hard on the heels of the first Lesser Redpoll caught in the wood in December 2016. Perhaps one of the impacts of the thinning of the woodland is to have made it more attractive to winter finches.

As well as the Siskin, I was lucky enough to catch a couple of Great Spotted Woodpeckers, which makes five for the year so far: we caught only nine in the whole of 2016. We have only caught one previously in Red Lodge, in 2015. There was a cracking male Nuthatch. Sexing Nuthatches is very easy: the male has dark brick red edges to its undertail coverts and also on the body wall adjacent to the axillaries; the female has paler, buff fringing.

Several of the Great Tits were being fed on by ticks, which I removed with my needle forceps. It is astonishing how the birds do not struggle when you are doing this - almost as if they know you are doing something to benefit them. ST

I never thought that when I started ringing at the Wildlife Trust's sites in autumn 2012 that the Firs would ever match Ravensroost for numbers and actually have a greater variety of species. There has been such a strong focus on improving the habitat at the Firs, for all wildlife, that it is great to see it working. To be fair, if one of my crew hadn't let a Goldcrest escape at Ravensroost on Thursday, there would have been one more bird retrapped and one additional species processed but, as both sites have the same feeding station arrangement (peanuts, mixed seed and nyjer seed) and both feeding stations were additionally topped up the day before the ringing session, it is a valid comparison.

The highlights of the Ravensroost session were the Goldfinches and Chaffinches. It was our best catch of Goldfinches at Ravensroost ever: not all of them were caught at the feeding station, three came to a lure in the open, on ride R38, the feeding station is part way up R28, on the opposite side of the main track.

The Chaffinches are a nice find. In 2012 and 2013 we had excellent numbers of them in the wood. However, in 2014 and 2015 the numbers fell off a cliff. 2016 was better and this is a good start to 2017, so I am hoping we will see the recovery continue. Unfortunately, at each site we caught one Chaffinch affected with the Fringilla papilloma virus. These are the first cases I have seen for a long time in the Braydon Forest.

In the Firs, the two retrapped Long-tailed Tits were at least three years old. One of them was ringed in the Firs exactly three years ago, was subsequently recaptured twice on Somerford Common in 2015, and has now returned to the Firs. Recapturing two Marsh Tits, which were ringed as youngsters in the Firs last year, was encouraging. There is some exchange between the Firs and Webb's Wood, but it does look as if they are breeding successfully in the Firs, as they are in Ravensroost Woods.

There was one worrying discovery:

It looks, horribly, as if the Fringilla papilloma virus might have crossed more than the species boundary. The left leg shows fairly typical warty excrescences, the right leg has rotted away leaving a stump. There was no evidence of mite infestation, so it looks rather like a potentially bad situation.

A small anecdote to finish. One of my trainees was wildlife watching at Lower Moor Farm in the week. Whilst enjoying great views of an Otter and a Kingfisher three photographers came into the hide. They spotted the Kingfisher, which was immediately followed by a torrent of abuse about ringers and ringing, because this particular bird happened to be one of the ten we have ringed in the last couple of years at the site. I am afraid that I do think that what we do is worthwhile, so there is no plan to stop anytime soon. You will always be welcome to join us for an explanation of the importance of ringing to ornithology - and I am always willing to listen to an explanation of why you think your photographs are more important than the long term studies we are undertaking. I am running a ringing demonstration at Ravensroost in April, so please come along and I will happily explain the importance of what we do. ST/JC/CS/NS/AH/SB

Tedworth House: Wednesday, 15th February 2017

It was a grey day today, which eventually turned to rain at midday, leading to Dave Turner, (Wildlife Trust Special Projects Officer, provider of sausage sarnies and all round good bloke and my help at Tedworth House) and myself getting soaked whilst putting the equipment away. Fortunately, I am out again tomorrow and it is scheduled to be dry and a bit sunny, so I should be able to dry them off. Whilst walking down to set up a couple of nets adjacent to the herb and vegetable garden by the house, we were treated to excellent views of the Black Redstart that has made the House his home this winter. Talking to Chas, the groundsman at the House, it has apparently found a cache of over-wintering ladybirds which it flies up and picks off to eat. It is now accompanied by a Robin, that has taken to picking up any that are dislodged by its feeding activities. I have not attempted to target the bird to ring it.

We had a good session, with the largest catch taken at the site. It was mainly Blue Tits, but there were some nice surprises in there as well. The biggest surprise was a Great Tit. I didn't recognise the ring number, TT96119. I subsequently learned from Jack Daw that he ringed the bird in the nest on 12th June 2016, in the area of Barrow Plantation just off A338 at CC tank crossing,` around 2 miles or so north of the site at Tedworth House. It was one of a brood of eight. Blue and Great Tits are known to disperse widely away from their natal sites. I see regular movements into and around the Braydon Forest but it is not usually through such an urban area.

West Wilts Group: non-group activities 2016

The West Wilts Ringing Group is actively involved in a large number of local projects: constant effort sites at Cowleaze Wood and Lower Moor Farm; the Braydon Forest Living Landscapes and Marsh Tit projects and the Ravensroost coppice project are all long-term projects focused entirely on our activities in Wiltshire. On top of that, we probably have one of the heaviest schedules of organised ringing demonstrations and social engagement programmes of any ringing group in the country.

Outside of that, however, we are also pretty active on other projects with other organisations. Ian Grier and Andy Palmer are long-term collaborators with the RSPB on the Wessex Stone Curlew project. Ian has been training RSPB staff (and Andy) on how to ring Stone Curlew chicks for three years now. In the 2016 summer season, as well as the Stone Curlew ringed by the RSPB staff, Andy ringed a further 10 chicks.

Jonny Cooper has been very busy this year. The year started with him working with the Widlfowl and Wetlands Trust to ring and radio track a wide variety of birds using the Newport Wetlands. I also got involved in this project and we had a great time ringing a number of bird species that we would not normally have expected to get close to. Further to that, Jonny spent time with the WWT at Slimbridge, Martin Mere, Caerlaverock and on Lake Windermere, doing a wide range of ringing and getting experience with a number of different catching techniques, including cannon netting and whoosh netting. In addition, it would be wrong not to mention his trip to Iceland and his long weekend at Spurn Point, immediately prior to my elevating him to his C-permit.

Although, unusually, I didn't get out with the Wash Wader Group or the North Thames Gull Group in 2016, Jonny and I have already started 2017 with a trip to Pitsea with the NTGG, and we have another two sessions lined up with them this Spring. So our additional birds for 2016 were as follows:

Retraps

Ringed

Pulli

Fulmar

3

1

Shag

22

Greylag Goose

21

Canada Goose

2

25

Shelduck

18

Wigeon

4

Teal

3

Mallard

4

Pintail

1

2

Coot

2

Oystercatcher

1

Stone-curlew

10

Ringed Plover

5

5

Knot

1

Dunlin

5

Snipe

1

1

Curlew

3

Black-headed Gull

1

11

Kittiwake

5

12

139

Common Tern

1

Arctic Tern

8

33

Black Guillemot

9

Puffin

3

1

3

Totals

12

118

233

ST/IG/JC/AP

West Wilts Ringing Group Totals 2016

A quieter year than last year for various reasons but, it would seem, a poor breeding season for many of our commoner birds. For example, Blue Tit ringed was down by 103 birds on last year: an 18% reduction. That reduction was almost entirely down to there being fewer young fledged this year. The ratio of adult to young in every other year recorded has been 40:60. This year the proportions were reversed.

Despite it being a quieter year there were quite a few highlights. Without doubt, the star bird was the Yellow-browed Warbler, only the second caught in Wiltshire. The previous one being caught in 2005. There were hundreds of them all around the coast but very few came inland, and there were very few sightings in Wiltshire. Also, Spotted Flycatcher were caught for the first time in the Braydon Forest: two in the Firs and one in Red Lodge in the autumn. All three birds were juveniles and, given that at least one brood was rescued and reared at the Oak & Furrows Wildlife Centre at Blakehill Farm, we can be pretty confident that they are breeding in the area. Almost as exciting was catching two juvenile Lesser Redpoll at the meadow pond in the Ravensroost complex. These were newly fledged birds, indicating that they, also, might well be breeding within the Forest.

We had a good year for Kingfisher at Lower Moor, with five juveniles ringed and three other individuals recaptured, including the first one we ringed at Lower Moor, in August 2014 and a bird that was originally ringed at Waterhay and dispersed westwards to end up at Lower Moor.

Full grown

Pulli

Recoveries

Total

Kestrel

1

0

0

1

Woodpigeon

4

0

0

4

Collared Dove

2

0

1

3

Tawny Owl

1

0

1

2

Kingfisher

5

0

3

8

Green Woodpecker

2

0

0

2

Great Spotted Woodpecker

10

0

1

11

Swallow

43

7

0

50

House Martin

16

0

0

16

Meadow Pipit

15

0

0

15

Grey Wagtail

2

0

0

2

Pied/White Wagtail

1

0

0

1

Wren

186

0

86

272

Dunnock

96

0

66

162

Robin

253

0

136

389

Redstart

1

0

0

1

Whinchat

2

0

0

2

Stonechat

6

0

2

8

Blackbird

146

0

64

210

Song Thrush

55

0

27

82

Redwing

132

0

0

132

Mistle Thrush

1

0

1

2

Cetti's Warbler

2

0

4

6

Sedge Warbler

8

0

0

8

Reed Warbler

27

0

3

30

Lesser Whitethroat

20

0

3

23

Whitethroat

29

0

2

31

Garden Warbler

39

0

15

54

Blackcap

208

0

78

286

Yellow-browed Warbler

1

0

0

1

Chiffchaff

292

0

82

374

Willow Warbler

75

0

13

88

Goldcrest

133

0

27

160

Firecrest

0

0

1

1

Spotted Flycatcher

3

0

0

3

Long-tailed Tit

149

0

89

238

Marsh Tit

22

0

29

51

Coal Tit

69

0

52

121

Blue Tit

454

0

173

627

Great Tit

244

0

134

378

Nuthatch

28

0

7

35

Treecreeper

36

0

23

59

Jay

2

0

0

2

Magpie

3

0

0

3

Starling

9

0

0

9

House Sparrow

21

0

0

21

Chaffinch

45

0

5

50

Greenfinch

18

0

2

20

Goldfinch

148

0

11

159

Siskin

25

0

2

27

Linnet

39

0

0

39

Lesser Redpoll

37

0

3

40

Redpoll (Common/Lesser)

2

0

0

2

Bullfinch

70

0

28

98

Yellowhammer

22

0

0

22

Reed Bunting

58

0

6

64

Total:

3318

7

1180

4505

Group highlights have included both Andrew Bray and Jonny Cooper being awarded their C-permits. During the year the group carried out a number of ringing demonstrations, notably for the Wildlife Trusts' Trainees Residential Course at Langford Lakes in January (trainees from Wiltshire, Somerset, Devon and Dorset); the Help4Heroes Families' Day and the Nationwide Building Society Families's Day, both in March, the Wiltshire Wildlife Trust's Watch Group in November plus nine sessions at Tedworth House and our usual sessions at Ravensroost Woods and Ravensroost Meadows. I also became involved in the work of the Wildlife Trust's Well Being Team. You can read about what the Well Being Team does on the Wildlife Trust's web-site: it is a very worthwhile social enterprise, for which the Trust should be applauded. We know that the people who have attended the talks and demonstrations have thoroughly enjoyed them (and I have recruited a ringing trainee from one of the events). Mike and Rob have already kicked off 2017 by running the demonstration for the Wildlife Trusts' Trainees at Langford Lakes again this January, which has generated another youngster interested in becoming a ringer. We look forward to an exciting and interesting 2017 (when it stops raining). ST and the rest of the WWRG

Blakehill Farm: Wednesday, 25th January 2017

We had planned on ringing at Ravensroost this morning but, as Ellie informed me that there was going to be a large work party there today, she thought we might do a session at Blakehill instead. I thought that we would have a go for Snipe and Redwing, as there are plenty of both around. Having had a chat with a few other ringers about the best way to catch Snipe, we set a few nets around the ponds close to the Whitworth Centre. Close to the marshy edges of the pond, close to grassy tussocks, as advised by those who catch them regularly. However, we made one mistake. The weather forecast had been for the weather not to freeze and for the freezing fog to have moved on. So Tuesday evening found Jonny and myself setting nets at dusk, furling them, ready to open them before dawn today. We saw a couple of Snipe fly off as we approached the ponds: boding well for the morrow, we hoped. Whilst setting the Redwing nets, I was lucky enough to get great views of a dog Fox. It was trotting around the field, barking quite regularly, He wandered off around the ponds for a while before coming back into the field. He eventually noticed me working and sat and watched me work for few minutes before going on his way. Clearly unconcerned at my presence.

Anyway, our mistake was believing the forecast. Jonny and myself arrived on site at 6:30, ready to open the nets, only to find them frozen together. It took an hour or so to open them but then the fog froze those elements that were not already rimed with frost. Despite those nets being incredibly visible, we did manage to catch a couple of Blackbirds and three Redwing that were clearly not looking where they were going. It was a shame we caught so few Redwing: there were good sized flocks moving around but they were clearly seeing the nets. Absolutely no sign of Snipe.

Ellie joined us at 7:30 and we set a few more nets, along the hedgerow / tree-line opposite the Whitworth Centre. These also became rimed quite quickly: but not before we caught our first Stonechat of the year After 11:30, the fog lifted, the nets thawed and dried out quite quickly and we caught a few more birds. The list was: Blue Tit 1; Stonechat 1; Robin 3; Redwing 3; Blackbird 2; Goldcrest 1; Bullfinch 5. Only 16 birds from seven species but an interesting catch nonetheless.

We took advantage of the proximity of the Whitworth Centre to set up our ringing station indoors, out of the cold and fog. We shared the building with the over-50's Wellbeing Group, who were fascinated with what we were doing and welcomed the opportunity to get a close up look at the birds. When they were offered the chance to be taught how to safely hold a bird and release it, we think (know) it really made their day. They were busy making rustic Wellington boot racks, so that you can hang up your wellies and not tread mud all over the place. I used it. Only one downside: the boot goes on upside down, so your hands get dirty.

Ironically, as I was walking across the field opposite the Whitworth Centre to start taking down the nets, I put up a Snipe: which flew off and narrowly missed the edge of the net I was neading towards. We will persevere. ST/JC/EJ

Tedworth House: Wednesday, 18th January 2017

Following on from my talk about Tedworth House at the WOS indoor meeting last Tuesday, I did my first session of the year there this morning. I mentioned as part of my talk that, despite the small catches (average 13.6 birds per session), this small woodland punches above its weight in the variety of the catch compared to some much larger woodlands. The Firs, Webb's Wood and Red Lodge have produced 24 species each; Somerford Common 27; Ravensroost, Lower Moor Farm and Blakehill Farm have produced 34 species and, until today, Tedworth had produced 30 species caught. As of this morning it has increased to 31 - and I do wish it had been 32.

Species number 31 was a Grey Wagtail. I have been trying to catch one of these beauties ever since I started ringing there in September 2013. We have tried baiting the pond area with mealworms, which have been gratefully received, right up to the point when we set out the walk-in traps. Today, one turned up at the frozen pond and managed to fly into my net:

This is the first I have ringed for five years, ever since I last had the chance to ring at Marlborough Sewage Works, on the 15th January 2012. It was a juvenile enduring its first winter. I was able to share the experience with a few members of the Tedworth team, who were fascinated with the yellow colouration of the belly and under-tail coverts and wanted to know why it wasn't a Yellow Wagtail. Explanation duly given.

Species 32, the one that got away, was a Black Redstart. It has been hanging around the house for about a week now. Unfortunately, I only found out about it when I arrived on site, so had none of the necessary equipment to attempt a catch, so I consoled myself with a couple of glimpses of it as it patrolled the roof area. The catch for the day was: Blue Tit 1(4); Great Tit 1(1); Coal Tit (3); Wren 1; Dunnock (1); Grey Wagtail 1; Robin (1); Song Thrush 1; Blackbird 4. Totals; nine birds ringed from six species; 10 retraps from five species, making 19 processed from nine species. ST

Pitsea Landfill Site: Saturday, 14th January 2017

Every now and again it is refreshing to have a major change to your ringing routine. Over the last couple of years I have had several trips out with the Wash Wader Group, a couple with the Wildfowl and Wetlands Trust and several with the North Thames Gull Group. They all catch their birds primarily using cannon nets. They probably should be called "mortar nets" as the net is propelled by four mortars. Today, Jonny and I went on the 275 mile round trip to the Pitsea Landfill Site to work with the NTGG. We arrived at 7:30 and were on the site by 8:30, with the cannon nets ready to fire soon afterwards. As you can see from the photograph below, the immediate landscape is pretty bleak, but it overlooks the Thames Estuary, which is somewhat nicer to look at

The gulls have become habituated to following the heavy machinery that compacts the rubbish into the landfill and then staying around to feed on the newly compacted rubbish. A truck load of rubbish is emptied in front of the net and the compacting machine runs backwards and forwards over it, which piques the gulls' interest. It then moves away and the gull settle down to pick through the rubbish for edible scraps. Usually we wait for an hour or more before there are suitable numbers of birds to warrant firing the net. Today, it was ten minutes.

The first catch was just under 100 birds: mainly Black-headed Gulls, but including a good number of Common and Herring Gulls, plus a couple of Great Black-Backed and one Lesser Black-backed Gull. All birds processed were identified and aged, fitted with a BTO metal ring on the right leg and a numbered colour ring on the left, and their maximum primary length and their head and bill length measured. Jonny got to ring his first Common, Great Black-backed and Herring Gull - so I suspect he thought it worthwhile.

We had reset the cannon net before starting to process the first catch: and it was fired for a second time just as the last couple of birds were being processed. This was a much bigger catch: approximately 250 birds. This time we had the same mix as before, but with no Great Black-backed, but with one intriguing bird: a potential Herring x Caspian Gull hybrid, shown below.

This was a cause for considerable debate amongst the highly knowledgeable regular team but I would not profess to be any sort of expert, and certainly don't have an opinion on it. However, the whole Herring Gull / Lesser Black-backed Gull ring species seems to be being split on a regular basis: 20 years ago would anybody have actually considered the provenance?

We had hoped to go for a third firing but the birds just disappeared. However, it was certainly the most compact and effective gull ringing session I have been on. Gulls are facing a considerable pressure these days: from compost. So much food waste is now being composted that there is much less food in the rubbish dumped in the landfill. Therefore, there is much less food for the gulls. This is reducing the number of birds on the tip and, clearly, stressing the gull populations. One result is, possibly, resulting in their moving more into towns and cities more often: where human feeding habits and discarding of same offers better feeding opportunities. ST/JC